What kind of car do you drive?

I own a couple of Caddy's and a Chevy Volt. 2014 Caddy CTS is my favorit with a turbo 4 cyl getting \nearly 30mpg on highway, adaptive cruise.....neatest feature on a car and automatic parking.......have to drive it to believe it. Caddy SRX is DW SUV.....nice ride and Volt.....cheap lease, saves gas but not much money with gas so cheap. I can affird nice cars.....drove KIA and BMW.....came back to GM which I've driven most of past 30 years.
 
It's so much fun to see some of the cool cars members here enjoy!

Just ordinary stuff for us. Honda CR-V for me (my third one), and Toyota Prius for DW (her second one). We're perfectly happy with them.

They let me take some pictures, so here is just a tiny sample of what's in this guy's garage. Needless to say, I can't say where it is.

Wow, now those are cars. You were lucky to see them.

My daily driver is a 2010 F150 Platinum, on weekends it's a 2014 C7
My husband drives a company vehicle during the week, on weekends a 2014 F250 Platinum
Then there are the occasional drivers in the back garage.
 
Spouse is retired & I still work part time because I like what I do. We are 40 - 50 years old & have net worth over 25x our current annual spending, no debt. We LBYM. However, I would like a luxury vehicle for my next car (60k) & just have trouble justifying it. What do you think? Can't take this money with us either.


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Even though I could've bought new w employee discount for 20 yrs, I never have bought a new car.

I've got a 2006 Audi A8L, bought in fall 2009 in Mt., and a 2007 BMW 750LI bought in fall 2012 w only 9k miles in Hi. Both bot around $30k, or less than 1/3 new cost.


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2012 85kWh Model S
2013 60kWh Model S

If I were spending $60k for a vehicle I'd look at a 60kWh Model S depending upon incentives in your area, or a 60kWh demo/loaner (for which you still get incentives but is discounted).
 
2014 Grey Camry. Thank God the key fob honks the horn so I can tell which one's mine.
 
We sold the house in Paris and the condo in Vail last year and now live in a retirement community in Texas. I am now in the witness protection program so we currently have plain cars.

DW drives a Hyundai Santa Fe (4 cylinder, of course)

I drive a Passat Diesel

The spare is a 2002 Dode Ram SLT 1500 that I bought for $500 three years ago. It's nicknamed 12.9.
 
2014 Ford Escape AWD 2.0 ecoboost Titanium. We are now spoiled, and probably never go back to the middle of the road models. Fell in love with all the gizmos ie: keyless entry, bluetooth hands free calling, My ford touch, BLIS, heated seats, foot activated tailgate, reverse camera, bitchn tune system, traction control in the snow, and amazing automatic parallel park feature.

We've always bought new, and drove the cars 20 years and 300k miles. I do all the maintenance.

I say, buy new and enjoy, life's too short.
 
Nothing too exciting here. I drive a 2009 Infiniti G37 that my DW 'handed down' to me when she got a 2012 Toyota Highlander. She didn't really like the cupholders in the G37, and that made her hate the car. I love the car and with 77k miles on it, I plan on keeping it for many more years!

Sent from my mobile device so please excuse grammatical errors. :)
 
97 Camry and 2003 Sonata.
Looking to pick up a Toyota Sienna LE for travelling.
New dealers want $3,500 under MSRP ( $28,400)
or I can get used 2013 one with 45,000 miles on it for $19,000

I'm not sure which way to go, so will ponder it for a while more...
 
DW: 2013 Toyota Corolla with 5K
Me: 2001 Honda CRV with 110K
DS1: 2001 PT Cruiser with 129K
DS2: 1994 Subaru Legacy Wagon (first car) with 118K
Toy1: 1966 Ford Mustang 289 with 77K
Toy2: 1997 Harley Davidson FLSTS
Toy3: 1998 Harley Davidson FXD
Toy4: 1976 Harley Davidson FXE
Toy5: 1956 Harley Davidson FL

The only vehicle that has been depreciating is the relatively new Toyota. The others are holding their value or increasing slightly. Insurance sucks with young drivers and too many toys... I plan to downsize the motorcycles at some point later this year because I now have to carry a big liability policy on each of the vehicles even though the toys are not used often --- it's a precondition to our umbrella liability policy.

Hoopdies are us. Who would guess we are FIREd....of course, all paid for.
 
Just retired end of Dec so entering into retirement we wanted all cars paid off and free of debt. Made lots of extra payments in 2013 and 2014 to get it done.

Wife: 2013 Subaru Outback. She just loves Subaru's cause of their visibility, 4WD, mileage is pretty good. 5 star crash.

Me: 2014 Mazda CX-5 AWD GT. Needed a car that was both practical and toy. Meets both needs. Room enough for bike and stuff, handles well, 30+ mpg, 5 star crash Since it was my retirement car I did splurge for a lot of the bells and whistles and glad I did. We keep cars for 10+ years and it will make retirement more fun. Our first retirement road trip to FL in March.

Other cars:

Son1: 2007 Subaru Forester 51k miles.

Son2: 2011 Subaru Forester 22k miles.

See a trend in Subaru's:confused: They are god cars, can be expensive to maintain, but when it comes to cars I have to have 5 star crash tests for everyone.

Kannon
 
A Mercedes Benz -- Bus that is. Here in Switzerland I use public transit (city buses, trains) and it runs so smoothly that there is no need for the exhorbitant expense of a personal car. For 600 Swiss Francs (about 600 USD) I get a card giving me unlimited rides to multiple zones in Lugano and some outlying areas for an entire year. Rent a Smart Car for trips when a car is essential. Previous car was a Subaru Forester in Canyon Red (answered to the name of "Cowboy"), which I drove in Maine for 10 years and 253,000 miles before selling it and moving to Europe.

-BB
 
2011 Ford Escape, 4WD for the snow, bought used
2012 Chevy Impala, driven occasionally in winter, bought used

Fun cars....
Mine - 2005 Mustang Premium convertible, summer car, bought new
Mr B - 1972 MGB, driven rarely, will be sold soon as we can find a buyer
 
Wanted a 2014 Acura MDX, but it was a little too big for our downsized garage:cool smiley:, so we settled for an RDX
 
I don't fit the normal retirement mode as still have two active boys at home:
1995 Freestar minivan with 106K miles
1995 Freestar minivan with 94K miles
2011 Kia Sedona minivan with 21K miles

All bought used, less than 3 yr old at time of purchase, not trendy so got great discounts from new pricing. Looking to replace one of the older cars with either a Toyota Venza or Kia Sorento right now, just keeping my eyes out for a good value, no hurry. While I can well afford a $60K vehicle, it is just a tool for me and can't justify the waste of $$, would rather spend it on a family adventure vacation. Looking to either Alaska or Europe for this summer. Just want a reliable comfortable car, just drove 2500 miles last week RT for family visit/death.
 
2005 Lexus ES - 80K
2006 Sienna LE - 90K

Should have both for a long time coming. That's just how I roll.
 
2010 Prius. At ~140,000 miles, performance has been flawless. 50mpg and zero maintenance is pretty darn sweet (well, replaced low beam bulb $15).
2011 Honda Accord. Second Accord, nothing flashy but comfortable and reliable. As the years go by, safety, comfort, and reliability seem to be the main features I seek in an automobile.
 
So who is tabulating the results by make, model, year etc?
 
2015 Acura MDX (base model with AWD; did not want the technology or entertainment package). I traded in two aging but fairly high value vehicles for it and paid the balance with my substantial retirement sick leave payout.

I had an Acura back in the late '80's (a manual transmission Legend) and liked it very much.

I have taken 3 road trips since retirement and felt more secure with a new vehicle in unfamiliar and sometimes isolated areas.
 
Depends on where I plan to go and/or do. Over the past year my daily drivers have been a 2014 4x4 Sequoia about 40% of the time, 2013 4x4 Tundra about 40% of the time a 2009 Z51 Corvette about 15% of the time, other vehicles about 5% of the time.
 
We drive older cars we got with low mileage and paid cash. We bought my husband's truck in the university auction, because it was low mileage and has a tommy lift. It's a 2004 Chevy. We have a 2001 Grand Marquis that we bought a few years ago and used mostly for travel, then we bought a 2008 Grand Marquis last year with very low mileage and inexpensive for mostly travel. We may sell the old one, but it's hardly worth much anymore. Then we got my dad's Mercury Sable station wagon when he died in 2010. It was a 2000 and he had it fully loaded and a fast engine, then almost immediately, my parents became unable to drive. It was only used for his caregiver to take them to appts. So we got a 10 year old car with 11,000 miles on it and it runs beautifully. I drive it to work and it still only has about 34,000 miles on it.
 
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